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Test could help treat hearing loss
New York -
Some hearing loss occurs after the body's own immune system
attacks the delicate inner ear. Now, new research may help in the
development of a test that could show which patients suffering from
this type of hearing impairment will benefit from immediate treatment
with steroid drugs.
The study was conducted by
researchers at the University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
and included 63 people with rapidly progressing hearing loss and 20
people with normal hearing. All the hearing-loss patients were
suspected of having an autoimmune cause for their hearing loss, and
all received steroids to treat the problem.
Researchers found that more than half
of the hearing-loss patients had antibodies against a protein called
IESCA (inner-ear supporting cell antigen) that's found in the inner
ear. The presence of the antibodies is a sign that their immune
systems identified IESCA as foreign to the body.
"In all, 28 of the 63 patients
experienced improvement in their hearing after steroid treatment, and
35 did not," study senior researcher Thomas Carey, a professor at the
U-M Medical School and department chair in the School of Dentistry,
said in a prepared statement. He added that the great majority, 89
percent, of those who improved had also tested positive to an antibody
for IESCA.
"The results strongly suggest that a
direct test for antibodies could accurately predict which patients
will regain hearing with steroid treatment," he said.
It would take several years to
develop such a test, he noted.
The study appears in the current
issue of the journal Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck
Surgery. -- Health Day News
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